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When the first coloured
pictures of Earth from space were broadcast, humanity
was, for the most part, profoundly moved. Many people,
perhaps for the first time in all of human history,
realized the truly global nature of human existence. We began to see that we were stranded, like explorers on a spaceship, in a vast universe unknown and unexplored, in which there is no certainty of encountering any other form of intelligent life or of finding another planet on which our species could conveniently live, yet we continue to respond to our environment as though it was dispensable. This book outlines the history of our slow alienation from environment, and proposes some visionary and yet practical solutions to the global ecological crisis. When the first coloured pictures of Earth from space were broadcast, humanity was, for the most part, profoundly moved. Many people, perhaps for the first time in all of human history, realized the truly global nature of human existence. We began to see that we were stranded, like explorers on a spaceship, in a vast universe unknown and unexplored, in which there is no certainty of encountering any other form of intelligent life or of finding another planet on which our species could conveniently live, yet we continue to respond to our environment as though it was dispensable. This book outlines the history of our slow alienation from environment, and proposes some visionary and yet practical solutions to the global ecological crisis. Table of Contents Preface Graham Purchase teaches metaphysics and epistemology in the department of Traditional and Modern Philosophy at the University of Sydney, Australia. His current research is on 18th Century Indian affairs. |
216 pages
Paperback ISBN: 1-551640-26-0 $19.99
Hardcover ISBN: 1-551640-27-9 $48.99